Gates is sworn into office

We can't fail in Iraq, defense secretary says

WASHINGTON — M-7 Defense Secretary Robert Gates took the oath of office Monday, warning that the nation cannot afford failure in Iraq and promising that the war there will be his top priority.

Gates, 63, becomes Pentagon chief at a time when President Bush and military commanders are hashing out the best way forward in Iraq, hoping to salvage a situation that is by many accounts on the brink of disaster. In his confirmation hearings before the Senate, Gates said he thinks the United States is neither winning nor losing the war and pledged to consider all options for the future.

"All of us want to find a way to bring America's sons and daughters home again, but, as the president has made clear, we simply cannot afford to fail in the Middle East," Gates said Monday at the Pentagon after Vice President Dick Cheney swore him in as the nation's 22nd defense secretary. "Failure in Iraq at this juncture would be a calamity that would haunt our nation, impair our credibility, and endanger Americans for decades to come."

President Bush chose Gates to replace Donald Rumsfeld immediately after the November elections, when Democrats took control of Congress amid a strong message from the public that the war in Iraq is not on the right course. Gates, a former head of the CIA, was sworn in early Monday at the White House and publicly took the oath from Cheney at the Pentagon.

Gates vowed Monday to provide his "candor" and "honest counsel" to the president and to listen to the "professionals" at the Pentagon, "who ultimately must carry out the decisions" his department makes -- alluding to the perception of Rumsfeld as a Pentagon chief who did not heed war advice from his top military commanders.

As U.S. officials debate whether to send more troops into Iraq or to create a major shift in military operations there, Bush said Monday he expects Gates to "help our country forge a new way forward in Iraq."

Sen. Carl Levin, D-Mich., the incoming chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee, attended the Pentagon ceremony Monday and said in an interview afterward that he fears the Bush administration could go forward with ill-fated policies in Iraq but thinks Gates will work with Congress. Sen. John W. Warner, R-Va., the outgoing chairman, said he, too, is optimistic.

"I expect he'll bring a fresh perspective on Iraq," Levin said. "Also, I expect he will be much more open to oversight."

Gates originally was a member of the Iraq Study Group, which recently issued a stark assessment of the war and made dozens of recommendations, but stepped aside after Bush nominated him to replace Rumsfeld. Gates had been president of Texas A&M University since 2002.

"I return to public service in the hope that I can make a difference at a time when our nation is facing daunting challenges and difficult choices," Gates said.